Abstract
A detailed clinicopathologic review was conducted on 90 SCs from the major and minor salivary glands. The median age at presentation was 50 years (range: 7-93). Sixty-nine (77%) tumours originated from major salivary glands, whereas the remaining 21 involved minor salivary glands.Six cases (7%) had cervical nodal metastasis. Only lymphovascular invasion (LVI) was associated with a risk of nodal metastasis (P < 0.05). The 5-year disease-specific survival and disease-free survival (DFS) were 98% and 87%, respectively. On univariate survival analysis, adverse prognostic factors associated with decreased DFS included minor salivary gland origin, atypical mitosis, high mitotic index, high-grade transformation (HGT), necrosis, nuclear pleomorphism, infiltrative tumour border, fibrosis at the invasive front, LVI, positive margin, and advanced pT stage (P < 0.05). When adjusted for pT stage and margin status, mitotic index, LVI, nuclear pleomorphism, and HGT remained as independent prognostic factors. We therefore propose a two-tiered grading system for SC. The low-grade SC is defined as those with <5 mitoses /10 high-power fields and no tumour necrosis, and high-grade SC as those with ≥5 mitoses /10 high-power fields and/or necrosis. This proposed grading system can be useful to risk stratify patients with SC for appropriate clinical management.
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